Tullyloughfin

Tullyloughfin (from Irish Tulaigh Log Fionn, meaning 'The Hill of the White Hollows') is a townland in the civil parish of Templeport, County Cavan, Ireland.

Tullyloughfin is traversed by minor public roads and rural lanes.

[2] In earlier times the townland was probably uninhabited as it consists mainly of bog and poor clay soils.

It was not seized by the English during the Plantation of Ulster in 1610 or in the Cromwellian Settlement of the 1660s so some dispossessed Irish families moved there and began to clear and farm the land.

[3] A deed dated 30 April 1740 by Thomas Enery includes: Tullinlough.

[5] The Ordnance Survey Name Books for 1836 give the following description of the townland- Contains 224 acres of which 43 are cultivated and 181 of uncultivated heathy mountain pasture...The townland is bounded on the east and south sides by a large mountain stream, near the west bank of which the principal part of the tenants reside.